Black Houston(s): Research, Policy & Activism–Past & Future(s)
March 23-24, 2023, in Houston, Texas
Known to locals as “H-Town” and “the Prophetic City,” Houston is the most ethnically diverse metropolitan area in the United States and the fourth largest city in the nation. At least 145 languages are spoken by city residents, and 90 nations have consular representation in the city. As such, it serves as an ideal landscape to reflect on the rich contributions of shifting and dynamic Afro-Diasporic communities in the city over time. For our purposes, the African Diaspora, broadly defined, consists of peoples of African origin living outside the continent, irrespective of their citizenship and nationality. This symposium will provide a platform for community members and scholars to come together in order to unpack the ways in which the political, economic and social landscapes of Houston impact the diversity of experiences for Black people in the city. It will serve as an important backdrop to draw attention to Black Houston(s) rich past, and create the intellectual space for scholars and collaborative working groups to establish research networks that will impact future policy and scholarship.
Black Houston(s): Research, Policy & Activism Past & Future(s) will bring together scholars, activists, policy influencers and community members from around the country to Houston. Symposium contributors will explore the ways in which Afro-Diasporic communities have impacted Houston’s history and culture as well as examine the emerging and ongoing issues Afro-Diasporic Houstonians face in the 21st century. Through this symposium, we aim to: (1) produce new knowledge related to Afro-Diasporic Houston; (2) provide a platform for scholarly and community engagement and collaboration; and (3) publish an edited volume drawing from the symposium.
The symposium will take place March 23-24, 2023, at Rice University and the African American Library at the Gregory School. The conference is free and open to the public, but registration is required to attend.
The committee welcomes individual paper submissions and panel proposals from:
- Scholars in all stages of their careers (including independent scholars, faculty, graduate and undergraduate students) from various disciplines such as African American Studies, American Studies, Art History, Cultural Studies, Film Studies, History, Medicine, Music History, Psychology, Religious Studies, etc.
- Representatives from Non-profit organizations
- Community artists, intellectuals, or journalists
The committee also welcomes poster presentation projects from undergraduate students that examine topics pertaining to Afro-Diasporic Houston or address the ways in which student research and activism has sparked change across institutions in the city.
While we are open to a range of topics, we are particularly interested in papers and posters dealing with:
- Policy and activism in Houston
- Methodological Innovation in Afro-Diasporic Houston—ethnographic, participatory, activist, experimental and response-able forms of research
- Historic landscapes of Afro-Diasporic Houston
- Collaborative and interdisciplinary projects about Houston’s Afro-Diasporic culture
- Cultural production (such as architecture, art, dance, food culture, music, oral tradition, or writing)
- Terms and grammar for talking about Black/Afro-diasporic Houston; the limits of language
- Methods for sharing scholarship on Black/Afro-diasporic Houston (for instance, public history or digital humanities projects)
Submission instructions
All submissions are due by January 15, 2023.
For paper or panel proposals, please visit https://blackhoustons.rice.edu/call-papers to submit the title of paper/panel, your name, institution/affiliation and contact information.
For poster proposals, please visit https://blackhoustons.rice.edu/call-posters for guidelines and to submit a draft.
Participants will be notified about acceptance to the Symposium by the first week of February 2023.
Symposium Publication
Selected papers and posters will be included in the symposium edited volume. Papers selected for inclusion must be original work and not previously published, and the paper cannot be under consideration for publication elsewhere. If your paper is accepted, the final submission will be due no later than July 1, 2023.
The symposium is generously supported by:
CERCL (The Center for Engaged Research and Learning)
The Fondren Library
The Rice University Task Force on Slavery, Segregation and Racial Injustice
The African American Library at the Gregory School
Contact us with questions at BlackHoustons@Rice.edu or learn more at our website https://blackhoustons.rice.edu/